Portrait and Biographical Record of Muskegon and Ottawa Counties, Michigan
Biographical Publishing Company, Chicago 1893
Part 21
 
 

Darwin G. Bell

    Darwin G. Bell, an extensive land  owner of Muskegon County, and a resident of Casenovia, was born in Rossie, St. Lawrence County, N. Y., February 20, 1845, being a son of David and Lacy A. (Blodgett) Bell His grandfather, David Bell, was born and reared in Vermont, and in early manhood was united in marriage with Miss Chloe, daughter of Asa Carpenter, and niece of Gov. Benjamin Carpenter. They became the parents of ten children, of whom two sons, David and Emer, and seven daughters attained to maturity. In politics, Grandfather Bell adhered to the principles advocated by the Whig party. He followed farming pursuits until his death, which occurred in Jefferson County, N. Y.

    David Bell, the father of our subject, was born in Vermont July 28, 1806, and was but one year old when his parents located in Rutland, N. Y. In his youth be gained a thorough knowledge of agricultural pursuits, which be followed in his native State. In 1851 he came to Michigan and settled in Hillsdale County, whence, three yearn later, be removed to Casenovia Township, Muskegon County. He purchased one hundred and sixty acres of heavily timbered land on sections 20 and 29, but was not permitted to enjoy the rich fruition of his labors in witnessing its development into one of the finest farms in the county, for he was removed by death February 25, 1855. As did his father, he identified himself with the Whig party.

    The mother of our subject was born in Franklin County, Mass., in the village of Heath, April 17, 1812. She still survives, being the wife of John Brown. Her parents, Samuel and Susanna C. (Whipple) Blodgett, were natives of Massachusetts, the father having been born near Lexington. In 1828 be removed to New York, and followed farming operations in Jefferson County until his death, at the age of seventy-four years In religious matters, he was a Free-Will Baptist. He was twice married and by his first union had twelve children, five sons and seven daughters. His second marriage was childless. He was a son of Timothy Blodgett, a resident of Massachusetts and of English descent, who served in the Revolutionary War.

    In the parental family there were nine children who attained to mature years, three having died in childhood. Those who reached manhood and womanhood were: Goodloe H., a resident of Battle Creek; Helen M., who married and is now deceased; Ambrose D.,  of Mississippi, who enlisted in the Third Michigan Infantry, and served for four years and four months; Emer A., who served in the Third Michigan Infantry, and was killed in the second battle of Bull Run; Chauncey, who served in the Third Michigan Infantry in the Commissary Department, and now lives in Mississippi; Darwin G., of this sketch; Annette, who is married and lives in Missaukee County; Mrs. Emma J. Jackson; and Inez, Mrs. Seaman, who is deceased.

    Our subject acquired his education in the High School at Battle Creek and at Battle Creek College. He taught four terms of school in Fremont and Chester Townships, and at the age of twenty-four years he went to Big Rapids, where he received the appointment of Surveyor of Mecosta County. He also engaged in the real-estate and insurance business there, and for two years served as City Engineer. For eighteen years he has made his home in Casenovia, with the progress of which his name is inseparably associated. He served as County Surveyor for one term, and for fourteen years has been surveyor for the Western Michigan Lumber Company.

    The real-estate interests of Mr. Bell are extensive and remunerative. He is the owner of twenty acres on section 29, forty acres on section 20, and forty acres on section 21, Casenovia Township; he owns an interest in four hundred and eighty acres in Moorland Township, being the sole owner of one hundred and forty acres; he is also the owner of a one-half interest in five hundred and forty acres. In addition, be has valuable property in the village of Casenovia. Politically, he is a Republican, and socially is identified with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows.

    In May, 1875, Mr. Bell was united in marriage with Miss Jennie Northrop, who was born in Seneca County, Ohio, and is a daughter of William H. and Sarah (Tompkins) Northrop, natives respectively of Steuben County, N. Y., and Seneca County, Ohio. Mr. Northrop is s farmer by occupation, and during the late war enlisted in the Third Ohio Infantry. In 1868 he came to Muskegon County, Mich., where be still resides. His wife died in May, 1890, at the age of sixty-one. They were the parents of four sons and one daughter. The grandfather of Mrs. Bell was Eben Northrop, who lived and died in Steuben County. Our subject and his wife are the parents of four children: Claude V., Clyde C., Fay and Cora M.
 


George Nelson Johnston

       Through the good management of his farming affairs in general, the subject of this sketch has demonstrated the fact that skill and labor combined produce the beat results. He and his brother are the most extensive and successful mint growers in Muskegon County, and he has for ten years or more occupied a farm in MoorIand Township, consisting of two hundred and forty acres, of which one-hundred and forty are in a high state of cultivation. As a farmer and business man, he stands high in the confidence of the people, whose regard he has won by honorable dealings and genial courtesy.

    Born in Haldimand County, Canada, our subject is the son of James and Mary Ann (Yocum) Johnston. He is of Irish descent, his paternal grandfather, John Johnston, having been born in the Emerald Isle, whence he emigrated to Canada at an early age, and engaged in farming there until his death, in 1862, at the age of eighty-one. His wife, whose maiden name was Susan Stewart, was a native of Canada, and died about 1865, at the age of seventy-three. The maternal grandfather of our subject, Henry Yocum, was a native of Pennsylvania, but passed the most of his life in Canada, near Niagara Falls. He died in 1869, at the age of nearly eighty. He was a wealthy and successful farmer, a prominent citizen, and one of the first settlers along Lake Erie. The maternal grandmother, whose maiden name was Elizabeth Gould, was born in Canada, of German parentage, and died in 1855, at the age of fifty years. Longevity has been a prominent characteristic of this family through several generations. The great great-grandmother of our subject on the maternal side was Mary Stewart, who attained the ripe old age of one hundred and six, and a perfect image of her, as she appeared at that age, has been preserved in wax.

    The father of our subject, James Johnston, was born in the State of New Jersey in 1801. When a mere boy he acted in the capacity of teamster to the Government service during the War of 1812.  At the age of thirty-two he moved to Canada, and after a residence there at nearly twenty-four years he removed to Berrien County, Mich., whence, in 1865, he came to Muskegon County and settled in Eggleston Township, making his permanent home there. His death occurred October 28, 1871, when he was in his seventieth year, and after he had suffered severely for a number of years. He was a member in good standing of the Old-School Baptist Church of Ashland, and was s man of good habits and lofty principles, whose entire life was devoted to the faith of which be was a follower.

    The lady who In 1836 became the wife of James Johnston was Miss Mary Ann Yocum, a native of Rainham, Haldimand County, Canada, born on the 2d of August, 1816. She was a noble Christian wife and mother, beloved by all who knew her, and her life was a blessing to many. She passed from earth December 8, 1891, at the age of seventy-five.

    Our subject commenced in business for himself at the age of about twenty-two years, and for some time thereafter he engaged in lumbering, buying and selling lumber and shingles. In 1882 he settled upon the farm he now occupies in Moorland Township, Muskegon county. November 8, 18887, he and Miss Mary McVaugh were married. The bride was the daughter of Patrick and Katharine (Cull) McVaugh, natives of the Emerald Isle who emigrated to America and settled in Chicago. In politics, Mr. Johnston is identified with the Prohibition party and takes a prominent part in municipal affairs, giving his influence and support to all enterprises calculated to promote the material welfare of the community. in his religious connections, he is a member of the Free Methodist Church, to the support of which he contributes with liberality.
 

Frank W. Squier

     Frank W. Squier, a progressive citizen of Muskegon County, residing on section 1, Moorland Township, was born near Rochester, N. Y., October 17, 1853, and is a son of David W. and Sarah (Dayton) Squier, natives of the same State. His paternal grandparents, John and Mary (Lampman) Squier, of English and Dutch descent respectively, were also natives of New York. The ancestors of this family were a long-lived and sturdy race, possessing strong physical and mental qualities. The father of our subject, David W. Squier, a farmer and lumberman, was one ot the most prominent citizens, first of Muskegon, and later of Newaygo County, being largely interested in and identified with the lumber business of northern Michigan.

    Born at Ft. Edward, Washington County, N. Y., March 10, 1822, David W. Squier grew to manhood on the homestead of his father, and at the age of eighteen embraced the opportunity of devoting his time and energy to lumbering, a desire which he had long cherished. The fulfillment of this ambition decided his life pursuit, and made possible the success he afterward achieved. One of his favorite recreations during his boyhood days was to help in rafting logs down the Hudson and Susquehanna Rivers. In 1844 and 1845 he engaged as a contractor in Monroe County, N. Y., in getting out timber to construct the schooner "Genesee Chief" and the brig "Venise," for the Lake Erie service, working in the heavily timbered region of the Genesee River.

    December 18, 1846, Mr. Squier married Miss Sarah, daughter of Idas and Paulina (French) Dayton. Mrs. Squier was born in Monroe County, N. Y., January 23, 1829, and was reared and educated in the place of her birth. After his marriage Mr. Squier changed his plans to some extent for the time being, and engaged in agricultural pursuits in New York. In the fall of 1848 he located in the vicinity of Coldwater, Mich., and again pursued farming operations, interesting himself also in buying horses for the Eastern markets. In 1856 he settled in Muskegon County, Mich., on the Muskegon River, where he engaged in the hotel and lumber business.

    In 1858 Mr. Squier purchased one hundred and forty acres of partly improved land in Newaygo County, where he located permanently. He became one of the most extensive operators of pine and farming lands in northern Michigan, and the owner of over eight thousand acres, half of which is improved and under cultivation. He was a man of quick decision, and gave his personal supervision to all the details of his business affairs. His management, although skillful, was broad and liberal, and his business dealings were characterized by strict integrity. His private residence, built at a cost of $16,000, is reputed to be the finest farmhouse in Newaygo County. He was a believer in the good old Democratic principles, but was never an aspirant for political honors. After the death of his wife, October 13, 1889, he never left the old homestead, and seemed to lose all interest in his business affairs. At the age of sixty-eight, after a long and useful career, a short illness resulted in his demise February 4, 1890.

    Frank W. Squier is one of five children, only two of whom are now living. His educational advantages included a thorough course in civil engineering, the knowledge of which is very useful to him in the management of the estate. He was united in marriage February 19, 1891, with Miss Mary Dickinson, daughter of Frank and Maryett (Kimbell) Dickinson, natives of Vermont and New York respectively. Mrs. Squier was born in Michigan March 9, 1865, and received an excellent education in girlhood in Newaygo County, Mich. Our subject possesses many of the sterling qualities of his father, and is highly regarded by the people of his community. He devotes the most os his time and attention to the management of his extensive interests in lumber and agriculture.


Adam Patterson

     Adam Patterson was born in Brock, Canada, March 13, 1840, and died in Muskegon County, Mich., June 17, 1891. The half-century that spanned these dates was filled with deeds of kindness and generosity, and when the end came it was felt by all with whom he had business of social relations that the community had suffered an irreparable loss. This brief record of his life will be perused with interest by those with whom he was associated in days gone by, and will also furnish an example for the emulation of the rising generation.

    The parents of our subject, Alexander and Mary Patterson, were natives of Scotland, and in 1837 emigrated to America, settling in Canada, where they resided about twenty years. They then removed to Michigan and located in Berlin, Ottawa County. After a residence there of another twenty years, they sold out their farming interests and removed to Grand Rapids, where Mr. Patterson resided, practically retired from active business, until his death. Of ten children, our subject is the fourth in respect to age. He remained at home until about the age of twenty-two years old, assisting his father on the farm and at the same time acquiring a common-school education. He then engaged in farming in Polkton Township, Ottawa County, and followed this occupation about two years.

    Removing from Polkton Township to Ravenna, Mr. Patterson embarked in the milling and lumber business, and for about two years had an extensive trade in that line. Then selling out his interests in that place, he located at Titiute and erected a large mill for the manufacture of lumber and shingles. He did a thriving business here for about one year, then sold out and removed to Ravenna, where he remained for one summer. Thence he went to Casenovia and purchased the Edward Hayward mill, where his usual success attended him during his two year's stay. His restless ambition, however, induced him to again dispose of his property, after which he located in Half Moon Lake. After one year spent at that place, he went the Bailey and built one of the largest mills in northern Michigan, which he conducted for two years. Later he resided at Nunica, Ottawa County, and subsequently engaged in the manufacture of shingles on Rogue River.

    After having spent twelve months in the last-named place, Mr. Patterson disposed of his interests there and removed to Girard, Kan., where he engaged in farming. Like so many others who settled in the Sunflower State at that time, he soon discovered that farming operations there proved very unsuccessful, owing to the hot winds and the destructiveness of grasshoppers. As a  result of these causes, he met with the entire loss of all of his property, and after a two-years sojourn in Kansas returned to Michigan. In this State he located on a farm ten miles east of Grand Rapids, where he remained about one year, going from there to a farm in Moorland Township. Upon property purchased in this township he conducted agricultural operations on an extensive scale, and in connection with his farming interests he built and conducted a large lumber and shingle mill.

    Mr. Patterson possessed indomitable pluck
and energy, and we find him in 1877, less than two year after his return from Kansas, with his fortune so far retrieved that he was the owner of a fine farm and a large milling interest. His business here proved very successful and he made this his permanent home. He was married July 19, 1865, to Lovisa, daughter of John W. and Elizabeth Tibbitts, natives of New York. The marriage resulted in the birth of three children, one of whom, Ethel May, is deceased. Ella Frances and Elmer Franklin are twins, the former being the wife of Thomas Workman, of Moorland Township; the son married Mary McMillan and makes his home in Moorland Township. In the summer of 1891, Mr. Patterson returned from an extended tour through the South, where he ahd looked up a new location for milling operations. He was making arrangements to return to the South, when a brief and unexpected illness resulted in his death. He possessed many sterling and generous qualities, and his friendly and social disposition made him quite popular among his acquaintances.

          

 

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